I got tired of the "AI will replace everyone" vs. "AI is just a tool" debate so I pulled actual DFW employment data. Here is what is actually happening on the ground.
Jobs where DFW postings are DOWN since 2024:
- Content writing / copywriting: -34% in postings on Indeed for DFW metro. Source: Indeed Hiring Lab.
- Junior graphic design: -28%. Senior roles are flat.
- Data entry / administrative assistants: -22%.
- Customer service (non-phone): -19%. Chatbots are replacing tier 1 support.
- Basic financial analysis: -15%. AI can generate reports that junior analysts used to spend days on.
Jobs where DFW postings are UP:
- AI/ML engineers: +67%. Every company wants to "integrate AI."
- Prompt engineers / AI operations: +120% (from a small base, but the trend is real).
- Cybersecurity: +31%. AI creates new attack surfaces.
- Skilled trades (HVAC, plumbing, electrical): +18%. Robots cannot fix your AC in a Texas summer.
- Healthcare (nurses, PAs, therapists): +14%. Cannot automate human touch.
The nuance nobody talks about: AI is not replacing jobs wholesale. It is replacing TASKS within jobs. A marketing manager who used to manage a team of 3 copywriters now manages AI tools and one editor. The manager's job still exists. The junior copywriter roles do not.
DFW-specific impact:
- North Texas is a major corporate HQ hub (AT&T, CBRE, Deloitte, Goldman Sachs operations). These companies are aggressively adopting AI for back-office functions.
- The DFW tech corridor (Richardson, Plano, Frisco) is hiring AI talent at Silicon Valley salaries. Source: Levels.fyi DFW data.
- Blue-collar DFW jobs are largely insulated. Construction, logistics, and skilled trades are booming.
Sources:
- Indeed Hiring Lab — DFW metro job posting trends 2024-2026
- Bureau of Labor Statistics — Occupational Employment data
- Levels.fyi — DFW tech compensation data
- LinkedIn Economic Graph — DFW skills demand
The answer is not "yes AI will take your job" or "no it won't." The answer is: it depends on what you do and whether you adapt.